Hajj Stories December 2015 Story Dec2015.pdfto relay the indescribable atmosphere of travelling from...

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Arafat is not always the time to leave this world

‘I heard Allah calling me,’ he said. I could not

ascertain whether he was saying it in jest or not, as our

cellphone connection was very poor. Millions were

simultaneously using the modern day wonder and

distraction of instant communication and social media

to relay the indescribable atmosphere of travelling

from Arafat to Musdalifah and then on to Mina a few

hours after having been as close to their Creator as

would ever be possible during the time of Wuqoof. I

was already on the border of Musdalifah and Mina, and

it was a few minutes before midnight, when hundreds

of thousands would start the journey to go pelt the

Jamarats. „I am fine now, and my son is pushing me in

a wheelchair to Musdalifah,‟ he continued. „The

hospital here on Arafat discharged me,‟ he added. I

was immensely relieved. Just a few hours earlier, when

I found him in a delirious state just before sunset on

Arafat, I was furiously involved in a life and death

situation.

We were busy with our final duaa on Arafat when I

was summonsed to his tent. He was a severe diabetic

and it was immediately evident that his sugar levels

were very high and off the scale. He had glazy eyes

and responded very animatedly to commands but did

not communicate verbally. Millions were getting ready

to start moving from the plains of Arafat and it was

impossible to easily walk between them. I immediately

called for an ambulance even before I stared examining

him as it was an evident medical emergency. He was

administered fluids trough a drip but no one could tell

us what exactly was given. Sometimes the symptoms

of too much or too little of a particular blood chemical

can be deceivingly similar. Giving too much of a

particular salt or diluting the already very little that

might be present through the incorrect use through a

drip can both lead to fatal heart rhythms. It was

imperative that we got him to a hospital so that we

could measure these substances in a laboratory and

treat him appropriately.

It took the ambulance about an hour to arrive. A doctor

employed by the Hajj authorities was on board and

immediately agreed that admission to hospital was

paramount. This doctor then left with another vehicle

to attend to another emergency. We readied our patient

and were about to stretcher him onto the ambulance

when someone shouted from an adjacent camp that

there was another emergency. The ambulance

personnel very quickly ascertained that this second

emergency was a pilgrim from another African country

but who unfortunately had already passed away in a

state of Ihram on the plains of Arafat. A light shroud

was placed over him and he was immediately put in the

ambulance. Much to our surprise the ambulance driver

insisted on taking the corpse to the hospital first. He

pledged to return immediately for our patient. „The

living takes precedence over the dead!‟ I pleaded,

indicated that every minute was of vital importance. „If

you save one life it is as if you saved the whole of

humanity,‟ an Islamic scholar who witnessed the

incident succinctly advised, referring to a verse from

the Holy Quran. The ambulance personnel would have

none of it and immediately drove off at a pace even

slower than that of the slowest walking pilgrim.

I started panicking and our patient‟s condition was

deteriorating rapidly. He was

now not even responding to

simple commands and sat

staring fixatedly somewhere

towards Jabal Rahmah, the

previously white covered

Mountain of Mercy now nearly

completely enshrouded by the

darkness of the night. Maybe it

was at this time that he heard

Allah calling him. We are all

told that those who pass away

in Ihram on Arafat will surely

go straight to Heaven. We as

doctors are always told that

you do your utmost to preserve

life. As far as I was concerned

he had a very treatable

condition. We just needed to

get him to hospital and do a

few blood tests! I again had the

health authorities phoned and

was promised that an

ambulance would be

dispatched immediately. We

felt every minute pass

agonisingly. What felt like an

eternity, but was actually less

than thirty minutes, it finally

pulled up with sirens

screaming.

I rushed up to the driver to explain the gravity of the

situation. I immediately recognised him. It was the

same ambulance that was there previously. I walked

to the back of the vehicle and my suspicion was

confirmed; the corpse was still there. There was no

way that the ambulance could have reached the

hospital and returned within that timeframe in that

crowd. The driver shrugged his shoulders. „We thought

we had to come stabilise a sick person,‟ he said. They

had no intention of transporting any living person to

hospital in the same corpse-carrying vehicle. „We‟ll put

our patient in the wheelchair or on a stretcher and be

very respectful of the body of the deceased,‟ I pleaded.

The vehicle was very well equipped and I could have

started basic resuscitation whilst we were on route to

hospital. The driver was having none of it and he

mumbled something about protocol. I frustratingly

again screamed about the rights of those alive taking

precedence over the dead. Having a scholar repeating

my words simply fell onto deaf ears. The driver

shrugged his shoulders, got into the ambulance and

drove off even slower than previously. Backward

hopping on one foot in Ihram I would have probably

moved faster.

It was dark by now and yet there were still massive

crowds around, mostly on the roads walking or making

their way to their buses. The camps were relatively

empty. The hospital was a few roads away and we

realised that pushing him in wheelchair amongst the

crowds and bumper to pumper vehicles was probably

going to take hours. We scanned the camps and

realised that all the gates were opened as the free exit

for pilgrims had to be guaranteed. We made him as

comfortable as humanly possible on the broken

wheelchair and took a shortcut through the camps to

the hospital. Some

camps only had

sand paths, others

rough pebbles, a

few had gravel

patches and only

one or two decent

paved paths. Three

of us took turns to

push the

wheelchair and we

managed to get to

the hospital within

twenty minutes.

The hospital was

staffed by

specialists and

within a minute of

his situation being

explained, he was

admitted and

prompt

investigations and

treatment

commenced. Blood

chemical

abnormalities were

immediately

identified and

appropriate

remedial intravenous solutions given. I was supposed

to accompany a group walking from Arafat but the

medical emergency clearly took precedence. As soon

as I knew that he was being taken care of in a world

class facility, I left and tried to catch up with the group

who had departed about two hours before me.

Unfortunately they took a path completely separate to

the road the hospital was on and though I was in

constant telephonic communication with them, I never

met them. In fact in my haste to reach them, I

somehow reached the border of Mina an hour before

them even though I started two hours later.

It was the first time in fifteen years that I walked alone.

Me, my backpack and my medicine bag with the latter

coming in very handy for a number of pilgrims needing

medical assistance along the way. It was whilst I was

sitting on the border of Musdalifah waiting for

midnight to arrive when he called to say he has been

discharged and was on his way. Allah may have called

him, but Allah decided to forgive him of all his sins so

that he can return to all of us as free of sins and as

innocent as a new-born child.

salimparker@yahoo.com

Hajj Stories

“We are all told that those who pass away in Ihram on Arafat

will surely go straight to Heaven.” Dr Salim Parker

relates a somewhat different ending

Pilgrims await the arrival of midnight on the border of

Musdalifah and Mina.

Dr Salim Parker

December 2015